&nbsp;
Spend your precious time on solving real design problems, instead of recreating the standard UI components you need in every project.
Foundation UI Kit for Adobe XD is the new widget library for rapid prototyping for mobile, tablet and desktop.... (continued)

Regardless of the design process you follow, you may want to have a PSD file with all Foundation components in your toolbox. Here is a collection of Foundation 5 components as the top bar, alert boxes, block grid, breadcrumbs, and more. All elements are s... (continued)

FoundationPress is the ultimate starter-theme for WordPress, based on Foundation.
Although the most recent version is built on Foundation 6, there is also a Foundation 5 branch available for download. The theme has been regularly updated since 2013 ... (continued)

Case 1: I've also had some challenges with navigation in F6. One specific thing that I've noticed is that submenu-item in a dropdown menu will overflow the screen when the menu is placed to the right of the screen.

Case 2: I'm using the dropdown button as a menu. I have specified that the dropdown panel should be displayed under the button. But when the button is aligned right on the screen, the panel is rendered on the left side.

Case 3: It should be possible to allow the title-bar to be visible for all screen sizes. As far as I understand, the current workaround is to use the data-hide-for attribute on the title-bar and specify a breakpoint where it should not display. You could define an insanely large breakpoint and use that. But why not just add the possibility to use a data-show-for="all" or similar? More details on this issue can be found here: https://github.com/olefredrik/FoundationPress/issues/726

What version of FoundationPress are you using? The latest version is based on Foundation 6. The link you're referring to is pointing to the Foundation 5 docs. If you use the syntax as described in the Foundation 6 docs, it should work as expected.

Interesting discussion. Difficult to give a good answer to what's the best CMS, as it really depends on the customer requirements for customization and quirky functionality etc.

Many colleagues who are experienced in .NET, speaks warmly about Umbraco. I've also heard many words of praise about Craft (PHP). There is a Yeoman generator for Craft + WordPress available here, if you'd like to try it out: https://www.npmjs.com/package/generator-origin-craft

Although many devs really hate it, it would be silly to discuss content management systems without mentioning WordPress (by far the world's most popular CMS, whether you like it or not).

The easiest and most obvious recommendation is to fork the FoundationPress repository on Github. The fork is your own version of the theme where you are free to make it your own, without affecting the main FoundationPress repository in any way.

Else you could simply clone the FoundationPress repository, remove the .git folder completly and init your own empty git project. If you do so, you will start from scratch, meaning the FoundationPress commit log will not be available for your anymore.

The official way to add scripts in WordPress is by using the wp_enqueue_script function. That said, it is not necessarily good for performance to load a handful of scripts in the header and footer. By loading scripts in Gruntfile.js, you get the opportunity to concatinate and uglify (minify) scripts using the 'grunt build' command. This will result in fewer and smaller files, which is beneficial for performance. And performance is one of the most important things you can facilitate in responsive web design.

Some skeptics might say that you lose control of your dependencies by loading scripts without registering every single script using wp_enqueue_script. This may not be a big problem if you use a front-end package manager like bower? Dunno.

There are several possible solutions here. Would love to hear what the WordPress gurus say about the matter.

This will add your libary (in this case scrollmagic) to your list of dev dependencies in your bower.json file.

There are several possible answers to your question, depending on what you want to achieve. If you want to concatinate all script into one file, I would simply put a reference to the library js file in Gruntfile.js after line 88.

Hi. I've created a custom widget library for Axure based on the UI components in Foundation. You might like it if you're familiar with designing prototypes in Axure. (Not all non-techies are into sass, html etc).

Hey everyone! Lot's of important issues were addressed in a <a href="http://foundation.zurb.com/forum/posts/38374-so-long-and-farewell">discussion about Foundation 6 issues</a>. One of the larger issues is the new responsive menu and it looks like a lot o... (continued)

Hi guys,
Just a quick question for web designers/developers out there who use Foundation.
What CMS do you guys use?
What does Zurb use for their clients?
I have been learning for a while but have never really gotten into any CMS. Wordpress driv... (continued)

I have used FoundationPress in several projects. I use it to build on and make a new "parent" theme. I would really like to learn to use Git so I can have versioning for my new theme.
But FoundationPress already has a .git folder and so I want to do m... (continued)

Hello everyone...It's really confusing on how to add my own javascript in foundationpress. I learnt there are two ways of doing this. One is to alter the function.php and enqueue.php and then call the function where you want to . Second is via node.js by ... (continued)

I'm running Wordpress and Foundation Press on Windows and I've used "bower install ScrollMagic" and these files are loaded to directory 'bower_components'. My Guntfile.js handles the copying of files on build like this...

FoundationPress is the ultimate starter-theme for WordPress, based on Foundation.
Although the most recent version is built on Foundation 6, there is also a Foundation 5 branch available for download. The theme has been regularly updated since 2013 ... (continued)

Case 1: I've also had some challenges with navigation in F6. One specific thing that I've noticed is that submenu-item in a dropdown menu will overflow the screen when the menu is placed to the right of the screen.

Case 2: I'm using the dropdown button as a menu. I have specified that the dropdown panel should be displayed under the button. But when the button is aligned right on the screen, the panel is rendered on the left side.

Case 3: It should be possible to allow the title-bar to be visible for all screen sizes. As far as I understand, the current workaround is to use the data-hide-for attribute on the title-bar and specify a breakpoint where it should not display. You could define an insanely large breakpoint and use that. But why not just add the possibility to use a data-show-for="all" or similar? More details on this issue can be found here: https://github.com/olefredrik/FoundationPress/issues/726

What version of FoundationPress are you using? The latest version is based on Foundation 6. The link you're referring to is pointing to the Foundation 5 docs. If you use the syntax as described in the Foundation 6 docs, it should work as expected.

Interesting discussion. Difficult to give a good answer to what's the best CMS, as it really depends on the customer requirements for customization and quirky functionality etc.

Many colleagues who are experienced in .NET, speaks warmly about Umbraco. I've also heard many words of praise about Craft (PHP). There is a Yeoman generator for Craft + WordPress available here, if you'd like to try it out: https://www.npmjs.com/package/generator-origin-craft

Although many devs really hate it, it would be silly to discuss content management systems without mentioning WordPress (by far the world's most popular CMS, whether you like it or not).

The easiest and most obvious recommendation is to fork the FoundationPress repository on Github. The fork is your own version of the theme where you are free to make it your own, without affecting the main FoundationPress repository in any way.

Else you could simply clone the FoundationPress repository, remove the .git folder completly and init your own empty git project. If you do so, you will start from scratch, meaning the FoundationPress commit log will not be available for your anymore.

The official way to add scripts in WordPress is by using the wp_enqueue_script function. That said, it is not necessarily good for performance to load a handful of scripts in the header and footer. By loading scripts in Gruntfile.js, you get the opportunity to concatinate and uglify (minify) scripts using the 'grunt build' command. This will result in fewer and smaller files, which is beneficial for performance. And performance is one of the most important things you can facilitate in responsive web design.

Some skeptics might say that you lose control of your dependencies by loading scripts without registering every single script using wp_enqueue_script. This may not be a big problem if you use a front-end package manager like bower? Dunno.

There are several possible solutions here. Would love to hear what the WordPress gurus say about the matter.

This will add your libary (in this case scrollmagic) to your list of dev dependencies in your bower.json file.

There are several possible answers to your question, depending on what you want to achieve. If you want to concatinate all script into one file, I would simply put a reference to the library js file in Gruntfile.js after line 88.

Hi. I've created a custom widget library for Axure based on the UI components in Foundation. You might like it if you're familiar with designing prototypes in Axure. (Not all non-techies are into sass, html etc).